Ottawa Citizen

High school teacher calmed pupil who held class hostage

- JONATHAN MATTISE

With 29 terrified students looking on, a West Virginia high school teacher managed to calm a 14-year-old student who pointed a gun at her in her classroom, giving a police chief time to arrive and convince the boy to free his peers and surrender, authoritie­s said.

No one was hurt Tuesday in the hostage-taking drama that rocked a high school in the small town of Philippi, home to about 3,000 people.

State Police Lt. Michael Baylous said it began after 1 p.m. Tuesday with the student taking a pistol into a second-floor classroom at Philip Barbour High School, a drab brown campus in a rural area of tree-peppered rolling hills. He wouldn’t say what spurred the hostage-taking, citing an ongoing investigat­ion.

Without naming the teacher, Barbour County Schools Supt. Jeffrey Woofter credited her for maintainin­g control just when classes were about to change. Woofter also praised the local police chief for getting quickly to the scene and talking the suspect into giving up.

The teacher talked the boy into not allowing the next group of students to enter the classroom. Alerted by those students, another teacher told school administra­tors, who then called 911. “The teacher did a miraculous job, calming the student, maintainin­g order in the class,” Woofter said.

The entire situation was contained in about two or three hours, police said. Meanwhile, the rest of the 724-student body was safely evacuated to the bleachers of the football stadium, where they awaited rides home.

Kayla Smith, a 17-year-old senior, said initially no one in her classroom in the same building took the “code red” warning seriously. “Then we all held hands and said a prayer,” she said.

Woofter said Philippi Police Chief Jeff Walters negotiated the release of the students from the classroom and eventually got the suspect to surrender a few hours after it began.

Walters “did an awesome job negotiatin­g with this very troubled young man,” Woofter said.

Barbour County Prosecutor Leckta Poling said she plans to pursue unspecifie­d charges against the suspect, who was taken to a hospital for evaluation.

Steve Saltis was among several anxious parents who went to the school and waited outside an area cordoned off by police tape while waiting for students to be released. Saltis said his daughter attends the school and that “a lot” was going through his mind while he waited for her to head home.

Saltis said law enforcemen­t officials told parents nothing while the suspect was still in the school.

“I think that’s the scariest I’ve been in a long time,” Saltis said.

Woofter, a former sheriff who started his new job as schools superinten­dent on July 1, credited parents for heeding police warnings to stay away from the school.

“In such a trying time, I was just amazed at our parents and how everybody responded to the situation,” Woofter said.

 ?? BEN QUEEN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? West Virginia police and school officials help parents reunite with their children at Philip Barbour High School following a hostage-taking situation Tuesday in the small town of Philippi.
BEN QUEEN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS West Virginia police and school officials help parents reunite with their children at Philip Barbour High School following a hostage-taking situation Tuesday in the small town of Philippi.

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